Project

Seidel Farms

The Seidel farms are dairy operations with dozens of cows. Without BMPs in place, the livestock had unrestricted access to all of the stream and wetland areas on the property. The animal’s manure entered the waterways, loading nutrient and bacterial pollution into Maiden Creek, a drinking water source for Reading, Pennsylvania.

With Schuylkill Watershed Initiative Grant funding, Berks Nature (formerly Berks County Conservancy) protected over seven acres of wetland areas with livestock exclusionary fencing, as well as over 10,000 feet of stream bank. Fencing keeps animals and their manure away from the water. High in nutrients and bacteria, manure in the water contributes to excessive plant growth and algae blooms in the waterways, depleting the water of dissolved oxygen as the plants die. Fish and other aquatic creatures cannot survive if dissolved oxygen levels are too low. The presence of pathogens in source water may increase the cost of downstream drinking water treatment. Agriculture runoff can introduce cryptosporidium, which may persist through water treatment and cause illness among immuno-compromised individuals.

The Seidel farms are protected in the Agricultural Conservation Easement (ACE) Program implemented by the Berks County Department of Agriculture (formerly Agricultural Land Preservation Board). ACE farms require a Conservation Plan which calls for or recommends implementation of agricultural BMPs. With the farmland protected in perpetuity, there is little chance of future residential or commercial development. Preserved in clusters, ACE farmlands help ensure the continuation of agriculture (the county’s top industry), while maintaining the rural landscape of Berks County. These large land areas provide for stormwater infiltration that could otherwise become runoff from paved, developed surfaces.

The Seidel farms were the first of 15 priority farms to receive stream bank fencing, buffers, and crossings through the Schuylkill Watershed Initiative Grant. They served as a critical demonstration project in the community, illustrating the effects of BMP installations for protecting water quality.

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Information

Work Group: Agriculture

Source of Funding: Schuylkill Watershed Initiative Grant

Leading Organization: Berks Nature

About Us

The Schuylkill Action Network (SAN) is a collaborative network of over 100 partners working together to improve water resources in the Schuylkill River watershed. With "action" as SAN’s middle name, SAN partners have been working since 2003 to implement best practices across the Schuylkill River Watershed.